LP - 15-60-75 (aka The Numbers Band) – Jimmy Bell's Still In Town - Original 1979 Stock
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CONDITION NOTE: JACKETS ARE VG+ WITH SOME SLIGHT RING WEAR, ORIGINAL PRICE TAGS AND CORNER BUMPS
"...Ohio has long been one of the great wellsprings of weird genius in US rock. The long-out-of-print 1975 live album by this extraordinary avant-R&B outfit – still gigging today – is another thundering, juddering marvel. They're part superhuman bar band (they often played four night a week, and their chops are sensational; local legend even says they were the inspiration for the Blues Brothers), and part leftfield art-rockers. There's something of Television's coiling, tangling intricacy here, with tilts at Beefheart, Afrobeat, krautrock, free jazz, and stern, striding funk besides. Robert Kidney's half-sung, half-spoken declamations only add to the drama, while the band fire off ingenious, multilayered riffs and rhythms that sometimes collapse into almost-freeform psychedelic reveries....It certainly seems a crime that it isn't better known." - guardian.com
"From the Rolling Stones to the White Stripes, plenty of rock bands have used the blues as a jumping off point and messed with the form to make something new, but hardly anyone pushed the music into a more interesting and innovative direction while staying true to its roots as 15-60-75, a Kent, OH combo known to locals as "the Numbers Band." Led by Robert Kidney on lead vocals and guitar and Terry Hynde on saxophone (yes, he's Chrissie's brother), this band never lost touch with the deep hoodoo groove at the heart of the blues, but they pushed and pulled at the sound from all directions, with the rhythm section laying out a steady and propulsive groove, additional percussionists throwing polyrhythms over the bed, the sax players blowing as if possessed by King Curtis and Ornette Coleman at once, the guitarists exploring the cosmos, and Kidney declaiming like the last great undocumented beat poet. Jimmy Bell's Still in Town, the group's first (and arguably best) album, manages to capture the band in all their shapeshifting glory, and what's most remarkable is how incredibly tight and unified this band is -- while this music leaps through any number of hoops, nothing and no one ever gets lost in the shuffle and the musicians perform with an intense focus that's all the more remarkable when you realize this was a live recording, cut in front of an enthusiastic audience at the Agora in Cleveland one evening in 1975. Music this smart and adventurous is rarely as satisfying on a gut level as Jimmy Bell's Still in Town, and this is a razor-sharp fusion of jazz, blues, and rock that kicks like a mule and will let you shake your ass all night long. David Thomas of Pere Ubu, a major fan of the Numbers Band, once called Jimmy Bell's Still in Town "the only good album ever recorded by anyone," and while he's clearly exaggerating to make a point, there's no doubt it's a better record than whatever you're listening to right now." - allmusic.com
000201511
CONDITION NOTE: JACKETS ARE VG+ WITH SOME SLIGHT RING WEAR, ORIGINAL PRICE TAGS AND CORNER BUMPS
"...Ohio has long been one of the great wellsprings of weird genius in US rock. The long-out-of-print 1975 live album by this extraordinary avant-R&B outfit – still gigging today – is another thundering, juddering marvel. They're part superhuman bar band (they often played four night a week, and their chops are sensational; local legend even says they were the inspiration for the Blues Brothers), and part leftfield art-rockers. There's something of Television's coiling, tangling intricacy here, with tilts at Beefheart, Afrobeat, krautrock, free jazz, and stern, striding funk besides. Robert Kidney's half-sung, half-spoken declamations only add to the drama, while the band fire off ingenious, multilayered riffs and rhythms that sometimes collapse into almost-freeform psychedelic reveries....It certainly seems a crime that it isn't better known." - guardian.com
"From the Rolling Stones to the White Stripes, plenty of rock bands have used the blues as a jumping off point and messed with the form to make something new, but hardly anyone pushed the music into a more interesting and innovative direction while staying true to its roots as 15-60-75, a Kent, OH combo known to locals as "the Numbers Band." Led by Robert Kidney on lead vocals and guitar and Terry Hynde on saxophone (yes, he's Chrissie's brother), this band never lost touch with the deep hoodoo groove at the heart of the blues, but they pushed and pulled at the sound from all directions, with the rhythm section laying out a steady and propulsive groove, additional percussionists throwing polyrhythms over the bed, the sax players blowing as if possessed by King Curtis and Ornette Coleman at once, the guitarists exploring the cosmos, and Kidney declaiming like the last great undocumented beat poet. Jimmy Bell's Still in Town, the group's first (and arguably best) album, manages to capture the band in all their shapeshifting glory, and what's most remarkable is how incredibly tight and unified this band is -- while this music leaps through any number of hoops, nothing and no one ever gets lost in the shuffle and the musicians perform with an intense focus that's all the more remarkable when you realize this was a live recording, cut in front of an enthusiastic audience at the Agora in Cleveland one evening in 1975. Music this smart and adventurous is rarely as satisfying on a gut level as Jimmy Bell's Still in Town, and this is a razor-sharp fusion of jazz, blues, and rock that kicks like a mule and will let you shake your ass all night long. David Thomas of Pere Ubu, a major fan of the Numbers Band, once called Jimmy Bell's Still in Town "the only good album ever recorded by anyone," and while he's clearly exaggerating to make a point, there's no doubt it's a better record than whatever you're listening to right now." - allmusic.com
000201511
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